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Entries in dreamsfood (10)

6:44PM

Making Seitan for #HHCGBenefit

Made a quadruple batch of seitan last night; 6 cups of vital weight gluten, a few handfuls of nutritional yeast, and a few liters of simmering liquid. 
So - for the Helping Hands Community Garden Benefit volunteering menu so far;
  • one pan of smoked bbq seitan with zucchini cole slaw (will devise a bread for sandwiching)
  • a gazillion bean salad
  • greens salad
  • roasted root medley
  • stuffed grape leaves
  • lettuce wraps
  • and perhaps a sheet of butternut squash sweet potato lasagna?
Beth is doing the root medley, Carmen is making and rolling the grape leaves, Lauren is doing lettuce wraps, Melissa is making a batch of hummus. Portia is up to something and helping out with a ton of equipment so we can serve it all up. We have a ton of butternut squash, zucchini and sweet potatoes to get made into tasty consumables.
Do you have a bulk dish you'd like to contribute to help out the HHCG Benefit Show at Wild Goose Creative? If so, let me know and we'll get you what you need! Don't forget, Patty Cake is doing the dessert, so bring some food and get some grub!
12:53PM

Recipe Testing!

Forks Over Knives: A Year of Meals: 365 Recipes for Plant-Based Eating Every Day of the Year [Paperback]

Del Sroufe from Wellness Forum will be releasing a cook book soon in conjunction with the folks at Forks Over Knives and he requested some recipe testers from Vegan Columbus and I pushed the idea to Dreamsfood. Although I am unsure how many other feedback forms he got from the other Dreamsfood members, I know I got in five in a week and was pretty happy about that. 

 

  • As an aside, I must admit that Del has definitely converted some of my cooking habits (no more sauteeing onions in olive oil as a matter of habit, using water from now on).

 

Here are some pics of my attempts to replicate the magic only Del can claim;

 

1:04PM

Volunteers Wanted for Testing a Cookbook, and Growing a Garden

Dreamsfood meetup tomorrow at Global Gallery in Clintonville (original);

So hey there, we’re doing something special tomorrow. It’s a meetup at Global Gallery at 12:30 - 2pm (link to Facebook event invite). We’re going to have joining us Dreamsfood members Derek Lory from the Helping Hands Community Garden there, and Del Sroufe aka Del’s Baked Tofu, Thai Peanut Noodles, etc (and Wellness Forum).

To begin with, we can just get together and chat and discuss any ideas you have for Dreamsfood (i.e. bounties, outreach, etc). Enjoy some coffee and social interaction? Meet us there.

Derek will be there to help drum up some volunteers for the Helping Hands Community Garden Benefit Show. He’s going to come up with some ways for us to help and we’ll try to coordinate how we can contribute. The HHCG partners with the Beechwold-Clintonville Community Resource Center and donates some of its yield to them. Let’s see if we can help them make an awesome benefit show, and maybe even contribute to their overall mission.

If you’ve been to the Clintonville Community Market’s prepared food cooler any time in the last however many years, you’ve probably been tempted away by the likes of Del Sroufe’s offerings (personal disclosure: who’s hooked on spicy peanut thai noodles? this guy.), or maybe you’ve had his food at the Wellness Forum. Either way, he’s putting together a cook book and we’d like to help him test his recipes! Join up and we’ll give out cooking assignments to the willing, then meet back up to share the dishes, compare cooking experiences, and fill out the feedback forms to help Del out.

So seriously join us tomorrow around 12:30 at Global Gallery Coffee Shop for coffee, talk, and volunteering! (Click through to join the Facebook event so we have an idea how many to expect, pretty please.)

12:53PM

Portable Shepard's Pie: Pot Pie Cupcakes - how to pt. 1

For the first Dreamsfood bounty I subimtted a recipe for Pot Pie Cupcakes. They are intended to pull together the goodness of a pot pie in a portable cupcake/muffin format.

Here's the gist; make shells | make soup | fill shells with soup | top with corn bread biscuit batter | bake | top with hollandaise sauce

Of course, being the Alpha Dreamsfood project, this is Columbus centered and vegan. The hope is to spread the message and open it up to more locations and flavors. Anyway, I'm hoping you are here for the recipe, because that's what I've got -

To begin with we will address the soups.  The first one, "Soothing Savory", had apple-smoked sweet potatoes, peas and charred corn. The second one, "Sassy Savory", had some apple-smoked seitan, leaks, butter beans, and smoked turnips. 

For the Soothing Savory, you first need to roast the potatoes (I recommend doing so at the same time as the turnips). Once you roast them and get them hot and sweaty, throw them on the grill for about two hours with some apple wood smoke and indirect heat (you will want to smoke at the same time you do the seitan). As the smoking is winding down, saute an onion, then add some garlic and build up a good soupy base. In a cast iron skillet, powder the bottom with paprika and ancho powder (and cayenne if you want some more heat) and dry toast the spices on medium then edge it toward high. Once the skillet is hot and the spices are done, drain a can of corn (actually use fresh if you can, but it's January in Ohio so...) and add it to the skillet and char the skins. Add along with a can of peas to the base of the soup. Add the sweet potatoes and *boom* you're basically done. From here on out you will be acting like a custodian more than anything. Spice it how you like it, I did my general tex-mex thing. The vegetables are the focus here, and not some spice blend so just keep in mind accenting.

Note: Using fresh corn would have been ideal, same for the peas. You can decide to drop some corn starch slurry into the mix if you'd like a thicker soup for your pies. Smoked salt, however, is one stand-out seasoning that I would say you should invest in for this and the next soup.

Sassy Savory is a smidge more intensive. For the seitan I made basically the same seitan as I had with the Seitanic Panic in the Oven Shepard's Pie. I used the same basic recipe from before, and a similar stock for simmering the seitan and for the rub. Smoking the seitan was nice and easy and done at the same time as the sweet potatoes and the turnips. So basically once you drop the seitan in the stock to simmer, cut up your sweet potatoes and turnips and put them in the oven at 350'F.

Once the seitan and turnips (which upon roasting will still have their bite, though a bit mellowed; upon smoking will mellow out entirely but still have a great punch of flavor) are done smoking it's time to build the soup. The soup starts the same as pretty much any other one I do, but in this case after you finish off the onion and garlic sauteeing, you can stock the stock with the simmering stock you used for the seitan (upcycle that salty water). Mire-poix is utterly your friend on this one, so grab some carrot and celery (and hell, add it to the other soup if you want). Originally I was going to use butter beans only but some black beans made their way in there as well. Add the sweet potatoes and corn starch slurry (if appropriate). Spice and season as you like. Reserve the smoked seitan for making the cupcakes, or just add toward the end of stweing.

Note: When/If to add the smoked seitan is an interesting problem. If you've ever baked seitan before adding it to a saucy stweing dish, you will know the effect you get. The surface becomes nice and resilient and the texture more durable. It is less likely to soak up massive amounts of liquid, and consequently flavor. I chose to preserve the acute smokiness by topping with seitan before serving (and I like the presentation aspect better); you could diffuse it (a) if you prefer, or (b) if you can't stand sharp smoked food, or (c) if you over-smoke those bad boys.

Next time, how to make the shells and build these bad boys...

1:26PM

It's that Shifty Time of Year again

Ah the season of seasonal Zoloft prescriptions, I see that you are a mere moment's breath away. I do not begrudge you, but still I must make ready myself in order to get through this time of year without psychoactives.

Here is my February through April road map;

 

  • Start planning meals for the entire week or starve
  • Miss Kristin reminded me of my budgeting motivation having lapsed by mentioning mint.com, Beth doubled down on that and I realize I need to get back into using that. I used to use it for a while and it was quite the benefactor in keeping me on the skinny and narrow
  • Make something. In keeping with my new year's resolution to make myself some furniture, I think I should start by going to the Habitat for Humanity ReStore and sourcing wood
  • Pay attention to a calendar, fill up the dates with good things to do
  • Kick out the jams with TWO MORE Bounty Dinners for Dreamsfood.org and a Clintonville Chili Cookoff!
  • Find excuses to be outside
  • Game of Thrones in April; something to count down to!
  • Buy clothes! Nothing beats away winter blues like marginally responsible consumerism (I mean. I can't go to work naked... ever again) veiled by the rationalizations of "can't make a second first impression"
  • Keep warm and dry
    • take up knitting, 
    • or sewing
  • ...More suggestions and ideas and your tactics for staying sane in the Season of Zoloft? Comment below so I will know

 

1:37PM

pron of food - pot pie cupcakes

 

New Gallery up from my recent entry for Dreamsfood's first bounty, vegan comfort food. It is an attempt at creating a pot pie using a cupcake format. The first one, "Soothing Savory", had apple-smoked sweet potatoes, peas and charred corn. The second one, "Sassy Savory", had some apple-smoked seitan, leaks, butter beans, and smoked turnips. Both were served in pizza dough shells with corn bread biscuits and a nice dose of vegan hollandaise.

So the Bounty of comfort food also included Shepardess Pie and four varieties of Spanikopita (one of which Portia had spontaneously created with some leftover mix and some leftover smoked seitan). It was a big success in terms of people loving the food prepared as well as the turn-out and feedback provided by our Dreamsfood Alpha group members.

Very excited for the second bounty, which was announced this week. It's focusing on Latin Foods and we're hoping for some foods inspired by our Western hemisphere neighbors. So far we have an enchilada entry and a flan (vegan flan? for science!) and I'm hoping for a ton of additional recipes.

I will get the post up soon detailing the how of making these exciting monsters! And YES, smoking seitan is utterly worth every ounce of the effort.